SAXIFRAGE

săkˈsĭfrĭj, common name for several members of the Saxifragaceae, a family of widely varying herbs, shrubs, and small trees of cosmopolitan distribution. They are found especially in north temperate zones and include many arctic and alpine species. Most American species are native to the West. The true saxifrages (genus Saxifraga and some species of other genera), also called rockfoils, comprise a large group of low rock plants including several species cultivated as rock-garden and border plants—e.g., the strawberry geranium (S. sarmentosa) native to E Asia, which propagates by runners like the strawberry. Among American wildflowers are the Eastern early saxifrage (S. virginiensis) and a Western species called umbrella plant (S. peltata). The genus also includes the arctic and alpine S. oppositifolia, one of the northernmost (found on Ellesmere Island, for instance) of flowering plants. In the old doctrine of botanical naming, the saxifrage [Lat.,=rock-breaker], because of its apparent ability to split rocks in rooting, was prescribed medicinally for calculous formations, such as gallstones. Other American wildflowers of the family include the miterwort, or bishop's cap (genus Mitella), named for its cap-shaped fruit capsule; the false miterwort, or foamflower (Tiarella); the grass-of-Parnassus (Parnassia palustris) of swamps and moist meadowlands; and the alumroot (genus Heuchera). H. sanguinea, called coral-bells, is a delicate ornamental with bright red flowers, native to New Mexico and Arizona. The other wildflowers of this group grow chiefly in rich woodland areas of the Northeast and the far West. The mock orange, or syringa, is a genus (Philadelphus) of deciduous shrubs native to Eurasia and North America. It is easily cultivated and has white blossoms generally similar to orange blossoms. One of the most popular fragrant species is the common, or sweet, mock orange (P. coronarius). Syringa [New Lat., from Gr.,=pipe], an early name for mock orange, is now the scientific name for the unrelated lilac; both bushes are also sometimes called pipe tree. Among other shrubs of the saxifrage family cultivated as ornamentals are the deutzia, any species of the Asian genus Deutzia; and the hydrangea, American and Asian plants of the genus Hydrangea with flat-topped clusters of white, pink, or blue flowers. (The blue flowers are sometimes obtained by putting alum or iron in the soil.) Of minor economic importance is the genus Ribes, a group of berry-bearing shrubs, yielding the gooseberry and the currant, to name a few. Some botanists divide the family into three smaller families but all share common features. The Saxifragaceae are classified in the division Magnoliophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Rosales.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Saxifrage
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books on: Saxifrage  - 159 results

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...and more showy than others; low shrubs SAXIFRAGE FAMILY Saxifragaceae , p. 242...than long; shrubs with curving stems SAXIFRAGE FAMILY Saxifragaceae , p. 242 66...broader than long; bark not shreddy SAXIFRAGE FAMILY Saxifragaceae , p. 242...
...Cinquefoil Potentilla fruticosa Y - Marsh Saxifrage Saxifraga hirulus Y - Drooping Saxifrage S. cernua Y Y Highland Saxifrage S. rivularis Y - Tufted Saxifrage S...
...Caper Capparidaceae 186 Orpine Crassulaceae 192 Saxifrage Saxifragaceae 196 Hydrangea Hydrangeaceae 206...
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journal articles on: Saxifrage  - 2 results

 
 
...Ellesmere Island early in their studies. One plant, the Star-like Saxifrage (Saxifraga foliolosa) caught my attention twenty-five years...Weasel River valley on Baffin Island in search of the Star-like Saxifrage. Near a monument marking the Arctic Circle, we struck up a...
...its insistent murmur. On the penultimate page of "Herbier de Bretagne" Guillevic avows the importance of writing. "Entre la saxifrage et la bruyere / Entre la mousse et la pervenche," he writes, "... Comme entre lazur et le nuage, / Entre le ciel et la barque...


 

magazine articles on: Saxifrage  - 8 results

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...knew. We were two English people in a primal English setting: greensward, shrubs, flowering perennials, paved walks on which saxifrage rooted between the cracks, low walls, statuary and monolithic masonry - an English enclosure far from England. Mature trees...
...pronounced "Eehalooeet"), a warm, desiccating westerly wind raises whitecaps on nearby Frobisher Bay and rustles carpets of purple saxifrage flowers as people emerge from their overheated houses (which have been built to absorb every scrap of passive solar energy...
...bears. Thus armed, we set off toward the islands west side. The snow is melting fast, and, on bare patches of tundra, purple saxifrage is already beginning to flower. We reach a ridge of sedimentary rock that runs the length of the island. Nielsen pauses for...
...less childish, with an expression of grief overcome by confidence in the future. Both maidens repose on a crumbled wall; yet saxifrage, stonecrop and spring flowers sprout from the rubble. In each version she half-turns to caress an oak-seedling which has risen...
...south-central Queen Elizabeth Islands in Canadas High Arctic by helicopter that summer, he saw plenty of the succulent purple saxifrage flowers the caribou consume in the cool days of early summer. But he encountered few animals and not a single newborn calf...
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newspaper articles on: Saxifrage  - 39 results

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...garden plants in terms of aubretia, alpine phlox and dianthus, saxifrage, sedum and (yawn) dwarf conifers. There is nothing wrong...dramatic but also more difficult to grow. Dont forget the saxifrages, sedums, Euphorbia mysinites, campanulas, phlox, primulas...
...Britain. Among the threatened species shown on the stamps are the Ladys Slipper Orchid, Deptford Pink, Downy Woundwort, Marsh Saxifrage, Plymouth Pear and Round-Headed Leek. SATURDAY * Stamp fair with postal history 10am-4pm at the Collingwood Centre, Collingwood...
...in flower at garden centres now for little more than pounds 1 a pot. Choose wisely because there are some, such as mossy Saxifrage, that will form a nice springy cushion between the rocks while others, such as thyme, will creep along the ground and will...
...their spell. My dislike started with saxifrages. Years ago, I was taken on a tour of...the horticultural wit who said that the saxifrage was a plant "which had never made up...Then I came across the special little saxifrage called Saxifrage grisebachii "Wisley...
...better to refresh my own. Clothes shopping? Pah! Bond Street pales compared with Boma Garden Centre, where sweet peas and saxifrage bloom. Did you know that you can get six bedding plants for pounds sterling3.50? Beat that, Primark. Flowers look good season...
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encyclopedia articles on: Saxifrage  - 16 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-16 >>  
 
SAXIFRAGE sak sifrij, common name for several members of the...Most American species are native to the West. The true saxifrages (genus Saxifraga and some species of other genera...strawberry. Among American wildflowers are the Eastern early saxifrage ( S. virginiensis ) and a Western species called umbrella...
DEUTZIA see saxifrage . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
SYRINGA see saxifrage . For the genus Syringa, see lilac . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
MITERWORT see saxifrage . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
FOAMFLOWER see saxifrage . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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